CRIME: It Pays to Organize

In a telephone booth in the lobby of Los Angeles' post office building,
a thin, bright-eyed 17-year-old talked excitedly into the phone: "Gee,
Mom, you shoulda seen it. Gangsters and crooks everywhere. They were
telling Mr. Kefauver about murders and losing millions of dollars
gambling. It was just like the movies . . . Just listen, Mom, the
Senator's coming past right now . . ."

Tennessee's Estes Kefauver stopped. "I'll talk to your mom, son," he
said. "I'm very glad to talk to you, Mom," he said into the phone. "And...